The Call Of The Canyon by Zane Grey (most inspirational books .txt) π
Laid The Letter In Her Lap And Gazed Dreamily Through The Window.
It Was A Day Typical Of Early April In New York, Rather Cold And Gray, With
Steely Sunlight. Spring Breathed In The Air, But The Women Passing Along
Fifty-Seventh Street Wore Furs And Wraps. She Heard The Distant Clatter Of
An L Train And Then The Hum Of A Motor Car. A Hurdy-Gurdy Jarred Into The
Interval Of Quiet.
"Glenn Has Been Gone Over A Year," She Mused, "Three Months Over A Year--
And Of All His Strange Letters This Seems The Strangest Yet."
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- Author: Zane Grey
Read book online Β«The Call Of The Canyon by Zane Grey (most inspirational books .txt) πΒ». Author - Zane Grey
"Snow! Did It Snow?" She Inquired.
"Well, I Guess. I Was Snowed In For A Week."
"Why Did You Choose This Lonely Place--Way Off From The Lodge?" She Asked,
Slowly.
"I Wanted To Be By Myself," He Replied, Briefly.
"You Mean This Is A Sort Of Camp-Out Place?"
"Carley, I Call It My Home," He Replied, And There Was A Low, Strong
Sweetness In His Voice She Had Never Heard Before.
That Silenced Her For A While. She Went To The Door And Gazed Up At The
Towering Wall, More Wonderful Than Ever, And More Fearful, Too, In Her
Sight. Presently Tears Dimmed Her Eyes. She Did Not Understand Her Feeling;
She Was Ashamed Of It; She Hid It From Glenn. Indeed, There Was Something
Terribly Wrong Between Her And Glenn, And It Was Not In Him. This Cabin He
Called Home Gave Her A Shock Which Would Take Time To Analyze. At Length
She Turned To Him With Gay Utterance Upon Her Lips. She Tried To Put Out Of
Her Mind A Dawning Sense That This Close-To-The-Earth Habitation, This
Primitive Dwelling, Held Strange Inscrutable Power Over A Self She Had
Never Divined She Possessed. The Very Stones In The Hearth Seemed To Call
Out From Some Remote Past, And The Strong Sweet Smell Of Burnt Wood
Thrilled To The Marrow Of Her Bones. How Little She Knew Of Herself! But
She Had Intelligence Enough To Understand That There Was A Woman In Her,
The Female Of The Species; And Through That The Sensations From Logs And
Stones And Earth And Fire Had Strange Power To Call Up The Emotions Handed
Down To Her From The Ages. The Thrill, The Queer Heartbeat, The Vague,
Haunting Memory Of Something, As Of A Dim Childhood Adventure, The Strange
Prickling Sense Of Dread--These Abided With Her And Augmented While She
Tried To Show Glenn Her Pride In Him And Also How Funny His Cabin Seemed To
Her.
Once Or Twice He Hesitatingly, And Somewhat Appealingly, She Imagined,
Tried To Broach The Subject Of His Work There In The West. But Carley
Chapter 3 Pg 46Wanted A Little While With Him Free Of Disagreeable Argument. It Was A
Foregone Conclusion That She Would Not Like His Work. Her Intention At
First Had Been To Begin At Once To Use All Persuasion In Her Power Toward
Having Him Go Back East With Her, Or At The Latest Some Time This Year. But
The Rude Log Cabin Had Checked Her Impulse. She Felt That Haste Would Be
Unwise.
"Glenn Kilbourne, I Told You Why I Came West To See You," She Said,
Spiritedly. "Well, Since You Still Swear Allegiance To Your Girl From The
East, You Might Entertain Her A Little Bit Before Getting Down To Business
Talk."
"All Right, Carley," He Replied, Laughing. "What Do You Want To Do? The Day
Is At Your Disposal. I Wish It Were June. Then If You Didn't Fall In Love
With West Fork You'd Be No Good."
"Glenn, I Love People, Not Places," She Returned.
"So I Remember. And That's One Thing I Don't Like. But Let's Not Quarrel.
What'll We Do?"
"Suppose You Tramp With Me All Around, Until I'm Good And Hungry. Then
We'll Come Back Here--And You Can Cook Dinner For Me."
"Fine! Oh, I Know You're Just Bursting With Curiosity To See How I'll Do
It. Well, You May Be Surprised, Miss."
"Let's Go," She Urged.
"Shall I Take My Gun Or Fishing Rod?"
"You Shall Take Nothing But Me," Retorted Carley. "What Chance Has A Girl
With A Man, If He Can Hunt Or Fish?"
So They Went Out Hand In Hand. Half Of The Belt Of Sky Above Was Obscured
By Swiftly Moving Gray Clouds. The Other Half Was Blue And Was Being Slowly
Encroached Upon By The Dark Storm-Like Pall. How Cold The Air! Carley Had
Already Learned That When The Sun Was Hidden The Atmosphere Was Cold. Glenn
Led Her Down A Trail To The Brook, Where He Calmly Picked Her Up In His
Arms, Quite Easily, It Appeared, And Leisurely Packed Her Across, Kissing
Her Half A Dozen Times Before He Deposited Her On Her Feet.
"Glenn, You Do This Sort Of Thing So Well That It Makes Me Imagine You Have
Practice Now And Then," She Said.
"No. But You Are Pretty And Sweet, And Like The Girl You Were Four Years
Chapter 3 Pg 47Ago. That Takes Me Back To Those Days."
"I Thank You. That's Dear Of You. I Think I Am Something Of A Cat. . . .
I'll Be Glad If This Walk Leads Us Often To The Creek."
Spring Might Have Been Fresh And Keen In The Air, But It Had Not Yet
Brought Much Green To The Brown Earth Or To The Trees. The Cotton-Woods
Showed A Light Feathery Verdure. The Long Grass Was A Bleached White, And
Low Down Close To The Sod Fresh Tiny Green Blades Showed. The Great Fern
Leaves Were Sear And Ragged, And They Rustled In The Breeze. Small Gray
Sheath-Barked Trees With Clumpy Foliage And Snags Of Dead Branches, Glenn
Called Cedars; And, Grotesque As These Were, Carley Rather Liked Them. They
Were Approachable, Not Majestic And Lofty Like The Pines, And They Smelled
Sweetly Wild, And Best Of All They Afforded Some Protection From The Bitter
Wind. Carley Rested Better Than She Walked. The Huge Sections Of Red Rock
That Had Tumbled From Above Also Interested Carley, Especially When The Sun
Happened To Come Out For A Few Moments And Brought Out Their Color. She
Enjoyed Walking On The Fallen Pines, With Glenn Below, Keeping Pace With
Her And Holding Her Hand. Carley Looked In Vain For Flowers And Birds. The
Only Living Things She Saw Were Rainbow Trout That Glenn Pointed Out To Her
In The Beautiful Clear Pools. The Way The Great Gray Bowlders Trooped Down
To The Brook As If They Were Cattle Going To Drink; The Dark Caverns Under
The Shelving Cliffs, Where The Water Murmured With Such Hollow Mockery; The
Low Spear-Pointed Gray Plants, Resembling Century Plants, And Which Glenn
Called Mescal Cactus, Each With Its Single Straight Dead Stalk Standing On
High With Fluted Head; The Narrow Gorges, Perpendicularly Walled In Red,
Where The Constricted Brook Plunged In Amber And White Cascades Over Fall
After Fall, Tumbling, Rushing, Singing Its Water Melody--These All Held
Singular Appeal For Carley As Aspects Of The Wild Land, Fascinating For The
Moment, Symbolic Of The Lonely Red Man And His Forbears, And By Their Raw
Contrast Making More Necessary And Desirable And Elevating The Comforts And
Conventions Of Civilization. The Cave Man Theory Interested Carley Only As
Mythology.
Chapter 3 Pg 48
Lonelier, Wilder, Grander Grew Glenn's Canyon. Carley Was Finally Forced To
Shift Her Attention From The Intimate Objects Of The Canyon Floor To The
Aloof And Unattainable Heights. Singular To Feel The Difference! That Which
She Could See Close At Hand, Touch If She Willed, Seemed To, Become Part Of
Her Knowledge, Could Be Observed And So Possessed And Passed By. But The
Gold-Red Ramparts Against The Sky, The Crannied Cliffs, The Crags Of The
Eagles, The Lofty, Distant Blank Walls, Where The Winds Of The Gods Had
Written Their Wars--These Haunted Because They Could Never Be Possessed.
Carley Had Often Gazed At The Alps As At Celebrated Pictures. She Admired,
She Appreciated--Then She Forgot. But The Canyon Heights Did Not Affect Her
That Way. They Vaguely Dissatisfied, And As She Could Not Be Sure Of What
They Dissatisfied, She Had To Conclude That It Was In Herself. To See, To
Watch, To Dream, To Seek, To Strive, To Endure, To Find! Was That What They
Meant? They Might Make Her Thoughtful Of The Vast Earth, And Its Endless
Age, And Its Staggering Mystery. But What More!
The Storm That Had Threatened Blackened The Sky, And Gray Scudding Clouds
Buried The Canyon Rims, And Long Veils Of Rain And Sleet Began To Descend.
The Wind Roared Through The Pines, Drowning The Roar Of The Brook. Quite
Suddenly The Air Grew Piercingly Cold. Carley Had Forgotten Her Gloves, And
Her Pockets Had Not Been Constructed To Protect Hands. Glenn Drew Her Into
A Sheltered Nook Where A Rock Jutted Out From Overhead And A Thicket Of
Young Pines Helped Break The Onslaught Of The Wind. There Carley Sat On A
Cold Rock, Huddled Up Close To Glenn, And Wearing To A State She Knew Would
Be Misery. Glenn Not Only Seemed Content; He Was Happy. "This Is Great," He
Said. His Coat Was Open, His Hands Uncovered, And He Watched The Storm And
Listened With Manifest Delight. Carley Hated To Betray What A Weakling She
Was, So She Resigned Herself To Her Fate, And Imagined She Felt Her Fingers
Numbing Into Ice, And Her Sensitive Nose Slowly And Painfully Freezing.
The Storm Passed, However, Before Carley Sank Into Abject And Open
Wretchedness. She Managed To Keep Pace With Glenn Until Exercise Warmed Her
Blood. At Every Little Ascent In The Trail She Found Herself Laboring To
Get Her Breath. There Was Assuredly Evidence Of Abundance Of Air In This
Chapter 3 Pg 49Canyon, But Somehow She Could Not Get Enough Of It. Glenn Detected This And
Said It Was Owing To The Altitude. When They Reached The Cabin Carley Was
Wet, Stiff, Cold, Exhausted. How Welcome The Shelter, The Open Fireplace!
Seeing The Cabin In New Light, Carley Had The Grace To Acknowledge To
Herself That, After All, It Was Not So Bad.
"Now For A Good Fire And Then Dinner," Announced Glenn, With The Air Of One
Who Knew His Ground.
"Can I Help?" Queried Carley.
"Not Today. I Do Not Want You To Spring Any Domestic Science On Me Now."
Carley
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